Creel v. Southern Natural Gas Co.

917 So. 2d 491, 2005 WL 2578815
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 14, 2005
Docket2003 CA 2761
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 917 So. 2d 491 (Creel v. Southern Natural Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Creel v. Southern Natural Gas Co., 917 So. 2d 491, 2005 WL 2578815 (La. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

917 So.2d 491 (2005)

Robert T. CREEL and Linda Dubroc Creel
v.
SOUTHERN NATURAL GAS COMPANY and C.L. Sloan Engineering, Inc.

No. 2003 CA 2761.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

October 14, 2005.
Rehearing Denied December 22, 2005.

*493 Jacques F. Bezou, Covington, Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee Robert T. Creel and Linda Dubroc Creel.

Grady S. Hurley, The Woodlands, TX, Counsel for Defendant/Appellant Southern Natural Gas Company.

Trudy H. Oppenheim, New Orleans, Counsel for Defendant C.L. Sloan Engineering, Inc.

Before: GUIDRY, PETTIGREW, and GAIDRY, JJ.

GAIDRY, J.

In this litigation involving an encroaching building on a recorded right-of-way, the trial court entered judgment in favor of the encroaching servient estate and *494 awarded monetary damages, and the dominant estate appeals. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On November 19, 1998, Robert and Linda Creel entered into an Act of Sale to purchase 3.38 acres of land on Patrick Lane in St. Tammany Parish for $25,500.00. At the time the Creels first found the Patrick Lane property, they had sold their house and had been living in a camper behind Mr. Creel's office for approximately one year. Mr. Creel is a licensed general contractor, and the Creels' plan was to build a house on the Patrick Lane property, live in it for about four years, then sell it and build a smaller home. The Creels had hoped to make a $60,000.00 to $85,000.00 profit on the home in four years' time.

The Patrick Lane property was bisected by a Southern Natural Gas ("SNG") right-of-way ("ROW"), which was granted by the Creels' predecessors in title and which was recorded in the Louisiana Public Records in Book 210 at page 483. Public Records show that three interstate natural gas pipelines were laid by SNG within its ROW in 1954, 1958, and 1969. At the time the ROW was granted to SNG, it was not known how many pipelines would be laid; therefore, the ROW agreement provided that a ninety-foot ROW would be established after the first pipeline was laid, with the centerline of the ROW set thirty feet west of the pipeline.

A title search obtained by the Creels before purchasing the property revealed that a SNG ROW ran through the property. The Creels also had a surveyor locate the corner posts of the property prior to the purchase, and this survey also showed a ROW on the property. However, the Creels never looked at the ROW documents which had been filed into the public records or had SNG locate their ROW until after the home was built.

At the time the Creels purchased the property, it was wooded, but there was a strip through the property that had been cleared and maintained by SNG. Prior to clearing the property and constructing a home on it, Mr. Creel contacted C.L. Sloan, of C.L. Sloan Engineering, Inc., a licensed engineer and land surveyor, to determine the location of the property's boundaries and the SNG ROW. Mr. Creel testified that he asked Mr. Sloan to "survey the markers and to make sure that the ROW was marked correctly." Prior to Sloan's survey, there were no markers for the ROW on the Patrick Lane property. There were pipeline markers on either side of the Creels' property, but none actually within the property's boundaries. Mr. Creel stated that he expected that Sloan would check the ROW documents filed in the public records when surveying the ROW. Sloan did not personally survey the Creels' property, but instead hired an unlicensed land man named Terry Jones to perform the survey. In a letter to the Creels' attorney, Sloan set forth how he marked the SNG ROW:

We found the S.N.G. 4 inch diameter steel pipe gasline markers 200 feet to 300 feet east and west of the Creel property (there were no markers within the property). Using these as the baseline markers we laid out a line generally NW-SE between them. We then set lines 45 feet from and parallel to this. We set stakes at the intersections of these lines and the Creel property lines.... For a boundary survey, the surveyor must rely upon markers set by S.N.G. to lay out such a R.O.W.

Although Sloan had performed surveys for Mr. Creel on numerous occasions in Mr. Creel's capacity as a general contractor, *495 this was the first time in his career that Sloan had ever performed a pipeline ROW survey. The Sloan survey of the SNG ROW was in error by 67.8 feet; thus the location Mr. Creel chose for the home based on the survey actually encroached on SNG's ROW by 7.8 feet.

A licensed professional land surveyor, John Charles Mattingly, testified on behalf of SNG as to the correct way to perform a pipeline ROW survey. He stated that he would first find the boundaries of the property and make sure there are no discrepancies, then he would get a copy of the deed to see what was actually purchased, and a copy of the subdivision plat to make sure the boundaries are correct. Next, to locate the pipeline ROW, he would obtain a copy of the ROW documents and probe the pipelines to find out exactly where they are. Specifically, in this case, he described the process as follows:

We'd probe the first line out, once they told us which line was the first one, which was the 20 inch line, the eastern most line. We'd probe each side of the pipe until we scrape it with the edge of the probing rod on both sides and we got the measure over half way and go down with it right then. And that's how we mark the center of the pipe. Once you locate that pipe all the way through the property, we would then offset 30 feet to the westerly direction. That would give us the center line of the right-of-way. Once we got the center line of the right-of-way, we offset that 45 in both directions. That gives us the whole 90 foot right-of-way, the exact location of the right-of-way, because the whole [ROW] document is based on where the line is actually laid.

Mattingly actually surveyed the pipeline ROW on the Creels' property in August of 2002 using this method. Mattingly testified that the minimum standards for surveyors require that a surveyor locate a ROW if he knows there is an encumbrance on the property he is surveying.

SNG representatives came out three times while Mr. Creel was working on the house. The first time anyone from SNG came out was around February of 1999, after Mr. Creel began clearing the property. Mr. Creel stated that a SNG representative arrived in a SNG truck and told him that a pilot patrolling the ROW for SNG had seen the survey markers in the ROW[1] and had notified SNG so that they could investigate. Mr. Creel told the SNG representative that he was building a house and pointed out approximately where he would be building. The man asked if Mr. Creel was aware of the ROW, and Mr. Creel told him that he was. The SNG representative did not have any ROW documents with him and did not take any measurements or tell Mr. Creel that the planned placement of his house would or would not encroach on the ROW.

The second visit came in approximately March of 1999, when Mr. Creel was forming the slab for his house. A SNG representative came by in a SNG truck, but Mr. Creel was busy working on the slab and didn't talk to him. The SNG representative spoke with Mrs. Creel about what could be planted along the ROW.

Once the house was up and the brick was being laid, a third SNG employee came out. He told Mr. Creel that one of their pilots had noticed construction within a certain distance of their ROW, and Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Enriquez v. Safeway Ins. Co. of La.
264 So. 3d 648 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2019)
Nikolaus v. City of Baton Rouge/Parish
40 So. 3d 1244 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2010)
McLachlan v. New York Life Insurance
488 F.3d 624 (Fifth Circuit, 2007)
Barrow v. Brownell
938 So. 2d 118 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
917 So. 2d 491, 2005 WL 2578815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/creel-v-southern-natural-gas-co-lactapp-2005.